Ingrid Silva

Ingrid Silva (born 1988/1989) [1] is a Brazilian ballet dancer who currently performs with the Dance Theatre of Harlem in New York City.

Ingrid Silva
Ingrid Silva dances for Swans for Relief (2020)
Born1988/1989 (age 31–32)
Occupationdancer
Current groupDance Theatre of Harlem
Websitewww.ingridsilvaballet.com

Early life

Silva was born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, to a father who served in the air force and mother who was a maid. At age 8, she started ballet through a community out-reach program, then trained at Dançando Para Não Dançar, Theatro Municipal's school, and under Deborah Colker and Pedro Pederneiras.[1]

Career

At age 17, Silva became an apprentice with Grupo Corpo.[2] In 2008, at age 18, Silva moved to New York City as there were very few opportunities for black dancers in Brazil. Shortly after she arrived, Dance Theatre of Harlem's founder Arthur Mitchell invited her to join DTH Ensemble, the junior company that performed when the main company was disbanded. In 2012, when the main company was reinstated, Silva joined the company permanently.[1]

Silva has called for greater diversity in ballet.[3] In an appearance on The Today Show, Silva noted that she has to color her pointe shoes, a process known as "pancaking", as most brands only provide light shade options.[4] In 2020, she appeared in a Nike advertisement celebrating Black History Month, narrated by Serena Williams.[5] Later that year, Silva danced The Swan in Misty Copeland's fundraiser, Swans for Relief, a response to the impact of the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic on the dance community, with funds going to participating dancers' companies and other related relief funds.[6]

Outside of ballet, Silva co-founded EmpowHerNY, a platform with different women to take over its Instagram account.[7]

gollark: ("you" in general)
gollark: I think that you generally have basically no chance of actually convincing anyone wrt. politics, and will probably just alienate them.
gollark: Imagine convincing people in political arguments.
gollark: It is in the literal sense that it, well, processes information, but not in a computer-y way. But this isn't very related, I think.
gollark: Well, thoughts occur in the brain, although I don't know how much of neuroscience is looking at high-level behaviours rather than just what individual neurons do.

References

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